- State of Indigeneity - Cal Poly Now
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- State of Indigeneity - ASPIRE - Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo
In an era where Indigenous peoples, lands, and cultures are continuously made invisible, we invite you to a corrective dialogue by Indigenous students that centers resilience and strength
- Native American Indigenous Cultural Center - Student Diversity . . .
The Native American and Indigenous Cultural Center acknowledges that the Cal Poly campus is situated on unceded land, included in unratified Treaty “C” region, signed at Camp Burton on June 3, 1851
- Native American Heritage Month - Diversity Inclusion - Cal Poly, San . . .
At Cal Poly, we acknowledge that the land on which our university sits carries the heritage of the Indigenous People of San Luis Obispo County and Region, the yak titʸu titʸu yak tiłhini, Northern Chumash Tribe
- Land Acknowledgment - Cal Poly Scholars - Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo
The tiłhini peoples have stewarded their ancestral and unceded homelands which include all of the cities, communities, federal and state open spaces within the San Luis Obispo County region
- Home - ASPIRE - Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo
The ASPIRE Center conducts place-based research on indigeneity, race and ethnicity on the Central Coast of California and across the country This annual intertribal conversation focuses on the distinct experiences of Indigenous Peoples
- Home - Diversity Inclusion - Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo
The Office of University Diversity Inclusion is committed to serving the entire Cal Poly campus in policy, practice, and purposeful efforts to cultivate a culture of belonging where each individual feels valued, supported, and empowered, regardless of race, sex, color, ethnicity or national origin
- Native American Heritage Month- State of Indigeneity - Cal Poly Now
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